CFP: Edited Collection on Bruce Springsteen for Routledge Studies in Popular Music Series

full name / name of organization:

Bill Wolff / Rowan University

contact email:

wolffspringsteencollection@gmail.com

I am soliciting abstracts by scholars from all disciplines, including scholar-fans and fan-scholars, to be considered for inclusion in an edited collection on Bruce Springsteen, which will eventually be submitted to Routledge’s Studies in Popular Music series.

In the middle of Bruce Springsteen’s 2012 Wrecking Ball tour promotional interview with the Paris media, one reporter observed, “so many people these past couple years look to you for your interpretation of events… . Look at us: when we were waiting for you earlier, so many people care about what you think, and what you feel about what is happening in the world.”

For many around the globe, Springsteen has become a voice of the everyday citizen in a political and social climate where such voices are marginalized. He has received a Kennedy Center Honor and with Peter Seeger sang before millions after Barack Obama was elected President for the first time. He has actively located his work within the lineage of Woody Guthrie and Seeger, reinforcing the necessity of contemporary folk music. In his SXSW Keynote he also asserted the importance of early rock and roll on his work, exclaiming, “Listen up, youngsters: this is how successful theft is accomplished!” In other places, he has discussed the significant influence of film and short stories, often describing his records as cinematic and looking for sounds that would evoke certain images. A new community of musicians, such as Tom Morello, Mumford and Sons, the Hold Steady, and Arcade Fire, has looked to him as a guide. In his most recent albums, Springsteen remixes work in the public domain and covers lesser known artists whose work speaks in a voice similar to his own. He has become quite adept at composing songs that respond to immediate contemporary events, such as “American Skin (41 Shots)” and “How Can a Good Man Stand Such Times and Live.” As a performer, Springsteen and the E Street Band are incomparable, with shows lasting over 3 hours without a break.

Despite his contemporary appeal, Springsteen also seems to be rooted in the traditional relationship between label and artist. His recent move to release live versions of his shows soon after the events, while seemingly progressive, reinforces artist- and label-centric publishing with the possibility of refocusing fans on official bootlegs rather than those they compose themselves. Yet, Springsteen doesn’t seem to mind—and rather enjoys—fans recording his concerts with their phones and uploading them to YouTube. His relationship with contemporary media and his fans, then, is complex and, oftentimes, rather vague.

Within this context has been a steady stream of writing on Springsteen, including several recent biographies, collections of interviews, international symposia, and the upcoming first issue of an academic journal dedicated to Springsteen.

The editor of the Studies in Popular Music Series has expressed an interest in seeing a Springsteen collection proposal. The series is described as a “home for cutting-edge, upper-level scholarly studies and edited collections covering Popular Music. Considering music performance, theory, and culture alongside topics such as gender, race, celebrity, fandom, tourism, fashion, and technology, titles are characterized by dynamic interventions into established subjects and innovative studies on emerging topics.”

Possible subjects might include but are certainly not limited to:

Springsteen and the folk tradition

Springsteen and influence

Springsteen’s notebooks and his writing process

Springsteen and the rhetoric of conversation

Springsteen and the rhetoric of performance

Springsteen fans and fandom

Springsteen fan compositions

Springsteen anti-fans

Springsteen and philanthropy

Springsteen and gender

Springsteen and race

Springsteen and remix

Springsteen and transmedia storytelling

The @springsteen account

Springsteen archiving and collecting

Springsteen tour data collection and representation

Springsteen and online videos

Springsteen and the relevance of popular voices

Springsteen and the music industry

Springsteen and his global appeal

Springsteen and literature

Springsteen and film

Springsteen and community

Springsteen and religion

Springsteen and I

Springsteen’s SXSW Keynote Address

Please submit a 500 - 750 word abstract and 200-word biographical note that to Dr. Bill Wolff, Associate Professor of Writing Arts, Rowan University, at wolffspringsteencollection@gmail.com by May 18, 2014. Indicate the anticipated word length of your chapter, between 3000 and 6000 words. Biographical note should in part describe your qualifications for writing your chapter. Authors will be notified of acceptance by June 30, 2014. Once abstracts have been accepted, a proposal will be submitted to Routledge. If accepted, chapters will be due in late 2014. All chapters will receive blind review.

cfp categories:

american

cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches

general_announcements

interdisciplinary

journals_and_collections_of_essays

popular_culture

rhetoric_and_composition

twentieth_century_and_beyond

By web submission at 03/03/2014 - 16:38

CFP Website maintained byThe University of Pennsylvania Department of English